Posts Tagged ‘Story’
Wednesday, April 7th, 2010
Here’s a round-up of links to things, me and the others, that I like. Videos (of matches, Max Dix, and me with why I never got published in the UK) to follow in the next weeks.
During March 2010, here’s my most popular Blog, “The movie I was in is out – “Tombé sur la Tete”.
Second popular, my -Story – RED BALL.
Third popular, my SPEED DATING Story.
Fourth popular, my first MAX DIX Video Clip.
Fifth: “The author as a live cartoon character.
Links I posted via my FACEBOOK PAGE or TWITTER PAGE were:
The ecstasy of the filmmaker Herzog.
“I’m Not Going To Think About Her” .
Plastic Bag By Ramin Bahrani.
And, finally, of course, DAVID LYNCH’s INTERVIEW PROJECT.
Lastly, anyone want to join my HIDDEN PEOPLE FACEBOOK FAN PAGE is welcome….

People like my on-going stills & video installation project, MY FOOT. Here was a recent favorite….
car
Tags:cartoon, Facebook Fan Page, Herzog, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, installation, love, Max Dix, MY FOOT, Red ball, social media, Speed dating, Story, Tombé sur la tête, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Musings | 1 Comment »
Friday, April 2nd, 2010

It’s hell now, just pure hell. Ever since I found myself, I see things differently, and it’s not particularly fun. It’s a whole new orientation. I sort of liked the way I saw things before, before I found myself. God, life, and me, were a lot simpler then. When I didn’t have a clue as to my real self was, I was pretty glad to just be living and sticking my hands in some nuts and bolts, proud when a motor purred. And after work, it was TV, beer, Sunday football games, the basics. It was a pretty good life.
Then I had to go and find myself.
And I discover I should’ve been a lawyer all this time. Jesus….
So now I’m attending night school, acquiring sophisticated tastes, learning big words, manipulating logical thought and instinctively looking for loopholes. I go to foreign films and like brandy. I read. Big books with small print. Front to back, even the footnotes. I’m hooked. It’s depressing.
But I just don’t know if it’s all worth it—really. This Self stuff. I’ve got all these new ambitions and worries. Career goals and financial liabilities. It’s tough. I wouldn’t recommend a true sense of self to anyone who’s been fooling himself for years and has already gotten used to who he thinks he is and has his habits, a beer belly, a life….
Maybe if I had discovered myself earlier, before I had all these pleasant memories when I didn’t know who I really was but was having a good time anyway.
My old friends really think I’m crazy now. They say, “Come on, Mike, you’re crazy. Stop going to college. My carburetor’s starting to go on the blink.” But I explain to these people, “This is the real me, since I found myself.” They back off as though I’ve gone loony.
Who knows. Maybe they’re right.
Nowadays, I just try to keep me to myself, stop having these urges to bill people for my time, and suffer in silence….
Taken from the book, “How to Find Yourself (or a reasonable facsimile).
Tags:absurd, fiction, flash fiction, Hidden People, How to Find Yourself (or a reasonable facsimile)", humor, self-help, self-improvement, self-knowledge, Story, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Noises in the House | 1 Comment »
Friday, March 26th, 2010

My big toe detached itself from my foot and took a walk. My foot said, Ah shit, not again. I said, You let him go. My foot said, I didn’t let him anything. He does this when I’m not looking. I never see it coming. He just ups and—what’s he doing?
I looked at my big toe waddle over to the nearest corner and stand, like a little bald egg with hands if he had hands tucked behind his back rocking slightly to and fro and staring intently at the corner as if he was in a museum and he had finally come upon a painting worth his attention.
He’s looking in the corner, I told my foot and my foot said, What’s he doing that for? What’s in the corner that’s so special? I said, Nothing special that I can see. It’s just a corner.
My foot shook itself slowly back and forth. Toes. I’ll never understand them. And with that my other big toe detached itself.
Oh no! my other foot moaned. Oh please, I said.
This big toe headed over to my trash container and stood before it. I watched my toe watching itself in the metal reflection of my trash container and my feet tried to tuck themselves up under me to keep the other toes in place but I wasn’t having any of it.
Feet, I lectured. Feet. Two things I ask, one large thing, one small thing. I ask you to get me from one place to another. Also, I give you the small duty to keep my toes attached to the front of you. And you fail.
Hey, we tried—
I don’t want to hear it, I told my feet, who shut-up. Now I have to get up and go over there in the corner and then over near the trash thing, and retrieve them.
No! said my foot. No! said the other foot. We don’t have any experience walking around without the two big toes and cannot guarantee your safety. We would instead highly recommend that you remain seated until both the big toes return of their own accord.
What if they don’t return?
My feet thought about that. You could crawl?
For my toes? For my toes! I have my self-respect. So I sat there, waiting for my big toes to return but I waited so long that I got drowsy and fell asleep and when I woke up the light from outside was beginning to dim its end of the day light giving the room a soft blue look I always liked and I stood up without thinking and didn’t fall over. I looked down to make sure everything was back in its place before taking my first step.
I said, Hello, again, Big Toes, and welcome back, and then I went for a short walk.
Tags:Big Toes, fantasy, flash fiction, fun, Hidden People, humor, short-short fiction, Story, surreal, Vincent Eaton, writing
Posted in Noises in the House | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
Hello You. Welcome. This post is, briefly, about this novel of mine:

I’ve had a quick creative moment to just video me and some words and images where I’m reading bits from some reviews that I got once upon a time for this novel of mine, cracking wise, gently, getting arch, as necessary.
This is performed in my continuing effort to produce something good, let the world know about it (gently, archly, as necessary), and then do it again.
The video is simple, it’s swift, it aims to inform, please and low-grade beg. If so moved, please leave a comment (either down below or on the YouTube page), and/or pass it on, investigate further, learn a musical instrument, dance the rumba, and love love love my freaking book.
Oh, yeah, the video. Click-click here-here to see-see (or behold-behold): Reviewing the Reviews.
Tags:an author on his reviews, Book Trailer, fiction, first novel, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, psychological thriller, Review from Booklist + Publisher's Weekly + Bridgeport Post, reviews, Self-Portrait of Someone Else, Story, suspense thriller, The New York Times Sunday Book Review, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Acting & Theatre works, Videos | No Comments »
Monday, March 15th, 2010

Monday. Podcast, ongoing & going on. Part Two, Chapters 2-4 plus Bob Collin’s Statement from “Self-Portrait of Someone Else”. The author reads it. 22:38 minutes
Previous chapters can be found under Images & Performance on this blog; they have been posted every Monday. Part Two continues next Monday.
To listen, click here: Self-Portrait of Someone Else, audio, Part Two- Chapters 2 to 4 & Bob Collin’s Statement
To read sample chapters, purchase or read reviews, click here: hidden-people.
Tags:audio book, fiction, first novel, free audio clip, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, novel extract, podcast, psychological thriller, reissue, Self-Portrait of Someone Else, Story, suspense thriller
Posted in Audio | No Comments »
Friday, March 12th, 2010

This Friday, instead of my usual short-short Noises from the House story, I have a longer story that has just been published online at The Cortland Review issue 46.
The story is called “Interruptions” and is taken from my collection of short stories that will be published near Christmas this year under the title, “Intimate Dialogues”.
Hope you like. The link: INTERRUPITONS at The Cortland Review. Thanks for any commentary you have…
Tags:fiction, fiction publication, Hidden People Limited, Interruptions, Intimate Dialogues, Issue 46, short story, short story collection, Story, The Cortland Review, Vincent Eaton, writing
Posted in Publishing, Writing (extracts from longer works) | 2 Comments »
Monday, March 8th, 2010
Monday. Podcast, ongoing & going on. The beginning of Part Two, Alisa’s Statement & Chapter 5 & another Alisa’s Statement from “Self-Portrait of Someone Else”. The author reads it. 12:58 minutes
Previous chapters can be found under Images & Performance on this blog; they have been posted every Monday. Part Two continues next Monday.
To listen, click here: Audio clip/podcast – Self-Portrait of Someone Else, Alisa’s Statement & Part Two, Chapter 1
Tags:audio book, fiction, first novel, free audio clip, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, novel extract, podcast, reissue, Self-Portrait of Someone Else, Story, suspense thriller, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Audio | No Comments »
Friday, March 5th, 2010

My favorite color is blue. My favorite food is pizza. Do you like me yet?
No?
More?
My parents divorced me when I was very young. No, that’s negative….did I say “divorce me”? Well. Wow. Freud slipped right in there, didn’t he? Well, you’re starting to get to know me.
Hey, how many minutes do we have again?
I like films, TV, anything based on reality. That’s not true. I have fantasies. I’ve always wondered what it would be like to be a fried egg, sunny side up, and be the yolk as the edge of a crust of toasted bread broke me open and all my yellow would flood and run everywhere. Always wondered that. Or maybe it’s all sexual. Who knows! Mysteries of the human—sorry?
Time’s awasting.
Maybe you want to know this stuff about me. Dior. Picasso, the European car not the painter. Saab. Let me say that again so there is no mistaking. Saaaaaab…. Sensuous, huh? Vogue. Vanity Fair. The New Yorker, optional. Silk. Silk. Silk. I cannot emphasize that enough. “Houston, we have a problem.” That still works for me. Shakespeare, the comedies, if I have to. Teen comedies, no. Slapstick, I’m a girl, so I don’t get all of it. Piercing, tattoos, goes without saying, not on my body. Terrorism. What is this big deal about terrorism? Did none of those people have parents when they were growing up? Oooh, terrorism. So scared!
Is this helping any? How about family stuff—
My father has a mustache, my mother dyes her hair red. I had an aunt who was a drunk and an uncle who I think tried to touch me improperly when I was young but I have blocked it all out, almost. Sorry, again, too negative.
I’ve never been to Bermuda but I’d like to go to Spain. Yes, the Bermuda Islands. No, not the shorts. You must think I’m crazy. I’m looking for love. I don’t have any pets. I think about politics but don’t get involved—what? Pets? Allergies. Ah-choo. Their fur. Or saliva. I need to take some medical tests on that.
Snow. Surf. Turf. Like it all.
God, where’s the time gone!
My grandparents are dead.
What more did you want to know?
Food, pizza. Color, blue.
I was toilet trained at an early age so I’m good that way. Same with tying my shoe laces. A snap.
Also, I may be allergic to dust or I don’t clean my place enough. One or the other. Love drives in the desert. Hate it when I’m in an airplane and hit an air pocket and everything goes zoom and people scream and things go flying and my stomach comes up. What? You too! Gosh. We have so much in common!
I’ve had maybe fifteen boyfriends. Sean, Bob, Frank, Tony—oh you don’t want those details.
I have a driver’s license, own a bicycle and went go-carting once. I follow my instincts. I’m very emotional, but don’t believe in Astrological signs. I mean, please, the Big Boom happens and the Milky Way comes out so neat that my future is foretold up there? I wish. If you look up at the stars tonight and see my fate, please, give me a shout. I’d really like to know. What? The Big Boom was the Big Bang? Big difference. I’m sure the universe wants us to get that terminology right.
Time!
I’m taking cooking lessons. Drugs—just say no.
Do you sort of like me yet?
Foods. Not too processed. Love. Not too processed. This—what?
No! No! My time is not up. We still have a chance of making this work. This is my life! It’s not ending. It feels like it’s just at the start.
Time?
Time.
Time!
But what about our love then?
Tags:desperation, fiction, flash fiction, funny, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, love, Speed dating, Story, time and love, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Noises in the House | 8 Comments »
Monday, March 1st, 2010

Monday. The end of Part One, Chapter 5, from “Self-Portrait of Someone Else”. I’m reading it. 9:08 minutes in total.
Previous chapters can be found under Images & Performance to the right of this blog; they have been posted every Monday. And will continue, with Part Two starting next Monday.
To listen, click here: Part One, Chap 5, from Self-Portrait of Someone Else, read by the author

Tags:audio book, Chapter 5, fiction, first novel, free audio clip, Hidden People, Hidden People Limited, novel extract, Part One, podcast, psychological thriller, Self-Portrait of Someone Else, Story, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Audio | No Comments »
Friday, February 26th, 2010

My mother calls the place she’s in, “The House of Diapers”.
I bite. “Why?” I ask.
“Because,” she answers over the telephone, me in Europe, her in Vegas, “here it’s all about different bags going back and forth in different places. They feed me to make nice poo-poo. Then I make poo and they change me. Then more food, more poo. People telephone me, I tell them I live in a shit house. They’re changing shits all day long. That’s where I live.”
She tells me about the very quiet woman she shares her room with. “I keep the curtain shut between us all the time.”
I bite yet again. “Why?” I ask.
“She paints with her poo, and eats it.”
She tells me from the best place her retirement funds can afford in Las Vegas how she remembers so many things that happened to her in her long ago world. And in great detail.
“Really?” I say, biting less.
“I’m letting my mind wander yesterday, and I remember my life when I was young, but I’m living in today, and the images get all mixed up together. Someone comes in and asks me something, and I have to look at them, and remember my circumstances, come out of my past, and this takes a few moments to do. And then they think you are old and slow and stupid. All I am is in the past, surrounded by every little detail. I’m remembering when I was a child at my Uncle’s fruit stand in New York asking him if I can have an apple and there’s the smells and sounds of the streets, it’s sunny and my uncle is talking to people of the neighborhood, weighing produce, and I’m by his side looking around as I bite into my apple and the taste is so overwhelming and sweet and then someone comes into my room and asks if I’ve gone poo in my diaper this morning. It takes a while to come back from New York and to my poo.”
She tells me how she can’t get out of her bed as she used to. How her bed is near the toilet door, but it’s just too much of an effort. How she just sleeps and sleeps. She coughs, gargles with excess saliva. I listen to her burps over the international telephone line. She sings snatches of songs. She breathes in my ear, living on.
Me, I’m still in New York, watching her uncle weigh produce.
Tags:childhood and old age, fiction, flash fiction, fruit stand, incontience, Juliette Durege, memory, New York, New York memories, poo, retirement home, Story, storyteller, Vincent Eaton
Posted in Noises in the House | No Comments »